Alright, like last night, pic... then word salad edit...
steve, feel free to correct anything I get wrong-ish here
word salad (eeek! math!):
Alright, so there's this thing that usually gets summarized wrong with describing how wings work, called Bernoulli's Principle. The important part of that here, is that minus "system losses" an enclosed system has a constant flow rate that depends on the initial area and the initial inlet area. My above simplification excludes "mechanical flow exitation" (i.e. fans). So, increase the area, reduce the speed. Reduce the area, increase the speed. One super important thing to keep in mind: when speed goes up, pressure goes down; and when speed goes down, pressure goes up.
Point the second: High pressure will move to a zone of low pressure. I have no concern about if it get "pulled there" or if the high pressure is "pushed into" the low... that's philosophy. We're dealing with reality... and trying to use it to our benefit. So, if we have a tunnel, and it has an inlet area at the front doing 60mph... and we scoot in to the back of the car and constrict it to... fit between a tire and an engine... and it reduces by 60%... then we have flow coming out the back end of the car at 100mph, and lower pressure. One other thing to keep in mind, is that after a certain length, the flow will be 'oriented' along the "lengthwise axis of the tube" (see: "fully developed flow") and it's effectively homogenous other than skin friction due to the wall (iirc).
If the "tunnel" isn't a tunnel... but two tunnels... the flow into the second tunnel has to deal with non-uniform flow into the second tunnel, and our "delta" efficiency loss goes up. Probably significantly. Can we do that? Yeah, sure! Maybe it's the right thing? Maybe not? If we do open up the side, then we won't have the same 100mph air in the "center-ish" of the back of the car.
So, why might it be important to put low-pressure high-speed air at the back of the car? Well, for a couple of reasons. One reason is it "fills in" a bunch of the hole punched into the air by the body of the car. The low pressure also helps convince air coming around the "exterior surfaces" of the car to "contract back" as if the car hadn't been there, instead of swirling around lazily. It just so happens that an area of expanding area and slowed air exists just below the exit of this air.... it's the flow coming out of the diffuser. Remember, high pressure wants to move to low pressure. So, the low pressure coming out of the tunnel, right over top of the diffuser actually acts on the whole of the flow under the car kind of like a huge "EXIT THIS WAY" sign... and that means that the whole diffuser makes more downforce. Because the air under the car, all the way back to the nose and the splitter are reacting to what's effectively a fan at the back of the car.
That's why you probably want a tunnel along the car for the autocross. I think you'll make more downforce with the tunnel there... although we're probably going to have to figure out what the "minimum area" available is between the frame, the engine, the rear suspension, and the tire.
Why do I want a tunnel for the drags, and to have the sides blanked off?
Well, again... as Steve says in his recent "misconceptions" article... "it depends"... or as my favorite college professor (the late, great) Dr. William Mason so often said: "Well, yes, you can do that."
Sure, we could open up the side. But... keeping the original exterior shape would be the least drag. And, funneling the flow from the "Ojai Duct" into the tunnels would mean (as I said in page 2) that the car's total cross-sectional area (Ax) is half what it was. Plus, if you squint at my dotted line, and think about the inside wall of the tunnel, you've effectively created a "laminar flow" airfoil shape around the formal car's frame. Which is one of the lowest drag shapes out there.
Now. The caveat: The Drag's heavily favor weight/power ratio over aerodynamic drag. So, you need to do this in a way that doesn't add a ton of weight-fraction.
One benefit, though, it we get to keep the body... which is budget-neutral.